1 .TH CRYPTSETUP "8" "May 2012" "cryptsetup" "Maintenance Commands"
3 cryptsetup - manage plain dm-crypt and LUKS encrypted volumes
5 .B cryptsetup <options> <action> <action args>
8 cryptsetup is used to conveniently setup dm-crypt managed
9 device-mapper mappings. These include plain dm-crypt volumes and
10 LUKS volumes. The difference is that LUKS uses a metadata header
11 and can hence offer more features than plain dm-crypt. On the other
12 hand, the header is visible and vulnerable to damage.
13 .SH PLAIN DM-CRYPT OR LUKS?
15 Unless you understand the cryptographic background well, use LUKS.
16 With plain dm-crypt there are a number of possible user errors
17 that massively decrease security. While LUKS cannot fix them
18 all, it can lessen the impact for many of them.
21 A lot of good information on the risks of using encrypted storage,
22 on handling problems and on security aspects can be found in the
23 \fICryptsetup FAQ\fR. Read it. Nonetheless, some risks deserve
26 \fBBackup:\fR Storage media die. Encryption has no influence on that.
27 Backup is mandatory for encrypted data as well, if the data has any
28 worth. See the Cryptsetup FAQ for advice on how to do backup of an
31 \fBCharacter encoding:\fR If you enter a
32 passphrase with special symbols, the passphrase can change
33 depending character encoding. Keyboard settings can also change,
34 which can make blind input hard or impossible. For
35 example, switching from some ASCII 8-bit variant to UTF-8
36 can lead to a different binary encoding and hence different
37 passphrase seen by cryptsetup, even if what you see on
38 the terminal is exactly the same. It is therefore highly
39 recommended to select passphrase characters only from 7-bit
40 ASCII, as the encoding for 7-bit ASCII stays the same for
41 all ASCII variants and UTF-8.
43 \fBLUKS header:\fR If the header of a LUKS volume gets damaged,
44 all data is permanently lost unless you have a header-backup.
45 If a key-slot is damaged, it can only be restored from a header-backup
46 or if another active key-slot with known passphrase is undamaged.
47 Damaging the LUKS header is something people manage to do with
48 surprising frequency. This risk is the result of a trade-off
49 between security and safety, as LUKS is designed for fast and
50 secure wiping by just overwriting header and key-slot area.
52 The following are valid actions for all supported device types.
54 \fIopen\fR <name> <device> \-\-type <device_type>
56 Opens (creates a mapping) with <name> backed by device <device>.
58 Device type can be \fIplain\fR, \fIluks\fR (default), \fIloopaes\fR
61 For backward compatibility there are \fBopen\fR command aliases:
63 \fBcreate\fR: open \-\-type plain <device> <name>\fR switched arguments)
65 \fBplainOpen\fR: open \-\-type plain
67 \fBluksOpen\fR: open \-\-type luks
69 \fBloopaesOpen\fR: open \-\-type loopaes
71 \fBtcryptOpen\fR: open \-\-type tcrypt
73 \fB<options>\fR are type specific and are described below
74 for individual device types.
78 Removes the existing mapping <name> and wipes the key from kernel memory.
80 For backward compatibility there are \fBclose\fR command aliases:
81 \fBremove\fR, \fBplainClose\fR, \fBluksClose\fR, \fBloopaesClose\fR,
82 \fBtcryptClose\fR (all behaves exactly the same, device type is
83 determined automatically from active device).
87 Reports the status for the mapping <name>.
91 Resizes an active mapping <name>.
93 If \-\-size (in sectors) is not specified, the size of the
94 underlying block device is used. Note that this does not
95 change the raw device geometry, it just changes how many
96 sectors of the raw device are represented in the mapped device.
98 Plain dm-crypt encrypts the device sector-by-sector with a
99 single, non-salted hash of the passphrase. No checks
100 are performed, no metadata is used. There is no formatting operation.
101 When the raw device is mapped (created), the usual device operations
102 can be used on the mapped device, including filesystem creation.
103 Mapped devices usually reside in /dev/mapper/<name>.
105 The following are valid plain device type actions:
107 \fIopen\fR \-\-type plain <device> <name>
109 \fIcreate\fR <name> <device> (\fBOBSOLETE syntax\fR)
111 Creates a mapping with <name> backed by device <device>.
113 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-hash, \-\-cipher, \-\-verify-passphrase,
114 \-\-key-file, \-\-keyfile-offset, \-\-key-size, \-\-offset, \-\-skip, \-\-size,
115 \-\-readonly, \-\-shared, \-\-allow-discards]
117 Example: 'cryptsetup open --type plain /dev/sda10 e1' maps the raw
118 encrypted device /dev/sda10 to the mapped (decrypted) device
119 /dev/mapper/e1, which can then be mounted, fsck-ed or have a
120 filesystem created on it.
122 LUKS, the Linux Unified Key Setup, is a standard for disk encryption.
123 It adds a standardized header at the start of the device,
124 a key-slot area directly behind the header and the bulk
125 data area behind that. The whole set is called a 'LUKS container'.
126 The device that a LUKS container resides on is called a 'LUKS device'.
127 For most purposes both terms can be used interchangeably. But
128 note that when the LUKS header is at a nonzero offset
129 in a device, then the device is not a LUKS device anymore, but
130 has a LUKS container stored in it at an offset.
132 LUKS can manage multiple passphrases that can be individually revoked
133 or changed and that can be securely scrubbed from persistent
134 media due to the use of anti-forensic stripes. Passphrases
135 are protected against brute-force and dictionary
136 attacks by PBKDF2, which implements hash iteration and salting
139 Each passphrase, also called a
141 in this document, is associated with one of 8 key-slots.
142 Key operations that do not specify a slot affect the first slot
143 that matches the supplied passphrase or the first empty slot if
144 a new passphrase is added.
146 The following are valid LUKS actions:
148 \fIluksFormat\fR <device> [<key file>]
150 Initializes a LUKS partition and sets the initial passphrase
152 either via prompting or via <key file>. Note that
153 if the second argument is present, then the passphrase
154 is taken from the file given there, without the need
155 to use the \-\-key-file option. Also note that for both forms
156 of reading the passphrase from file you can
157 give '-' as file name, which results in the passphrase being read
158 from stdin and the safety-question being skipped.
160 You can only call luksFormat on a LUKS device that is not mapped.
162 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-cipher, \-\-verify-passphrase, \-\-key-size,
163 \-\-key-slot, \-\-key-file (takes precedence over optional second argument),
164 \-\-keyfile-offset, \-\-keyfile-size, \-\-use-random | \-\-use-urandom,
165 \-\-uuid, \-\-master-key-file].
167 \fBWARNING:\fR Doing a luksFormat on an existing LUKS container will
168 make all data the old container permanently irretrievable, unless
169 you have a header backup.
171 \fIopen\fR \-\-type luks <device> <name>
173 \fIluksOpen\fR <device> <name> (\fBold syntax\fR)
175 Opens the LUKS device <device> and sets up a mapping <name> after
176 successful verification of the supplied passphrase.
177 If the passphrase is not supplied via \-\-key-file, the command
178 prompts for it interactively.
180 The <device> parameter can be also specified by LUKS UUID in the
181 format UUID=<uuid>, which uses the symlinks in /dev/disk/by-uuid.
183 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-keyfile-offset,
184 \-\-keyfile-size, \-\-readonly, \-\-test-passphrase,
185 \-\-allow-discards, \-\-header, \-\-key-slot, \-\-master-key-file].
187 \fIluksSuspend\fR <name>
189 Suspends an active device (all IO operations will blocked
190 and accesses to the device will wait indefinitely)
191 and wipes the encryption
192 key from kernel memory. Needs kernel 2.6.19 or later.
194 After this operation you have to use \fIluksResume\fR to reinstate
195 the encryption key and unblock the device or \fIclose\fR to remove
198 \fBWARNING:\fR never suspend the device on which the cryptsetup binary resides.
200 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-header].
202 \fIluksResume\fR <name>
204 Resumes a suspended device and reinstates the encryption key.
205 Prompts interactively for a passphrase if \-\-key-file is not given.
207 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-keyfile-size, \-\-header]
209 \fIluksAddKey\fR <device> [<key file with new key>]
211 adds a new passphrase. An existing passphrase must be supplied
212 interactively or via \-\-key-file.
213 The new passphrase to be added can be specified interactively
214 or read from the file given as positional argument.
216 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-keyfile-offset,
217 \-\-keyfile-size, \-\-new-keyfile-offset,
218 \-\-new-keyfile-size, \-\-key-slot, \-\-master-key-file].
220 \fIluksRemoveKey\fR <device> [<key file with passphrase to be removed>]
222 Removes the supplied passphrase from the LUKS device. The
223 passphrase to be removed can be specified interactively,
224 as positional argument or via \-\-key-file.
226 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-keyfile-offset,
229 \fBWARNING:\fR If you read the passphrase from stdin
230 (without further argument or with '-' as argument
231 to \-\-key-file), batch-mode (-q) will be implicitely
232 switched on and no warning will be given when you remove the
233 last remaining passphrase from a LUKS container. Removing
234 the last passphrase makes the LUKS container permanently
237 \fIluksChangeKey\fR <device> [<new key file>]
239 Changes an existing passphrase. The passphrase
240 to be changed must be supplied interactively or via \-\-key-file.
241 The new passphrase can be supplied interactively or in
242 a file given as positional argument.
244 If a key-slot is specified (via \-\-key-slot), the passphrase
245 for that key-slot must be given and the new passphrase
246 will overwrite the specified key-slot. If no key-slot
247 is specified and there is still a free key-slot, then
248 the new passphrase will be put into a free key-slot before the
249 key-slot containing the old passphrase is purged. If there is
250 no free key-slot, then the key-slot with the old passphrase is
251 overwritten directly.
253 \fBWARNING:\fR If a key-slot is overwritten, a media failure
254 during this operation can cause the overwrite to fail after
255 the old passphrase has been wiped and make the LUKS container
258 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-keyfile-offset,
259 \-\-keyfile-size, \-\-new-keyfile-offset,
260 \-\-new-keyfile-size, \-\-key-slot].
262 \fIluksKillSlot\fR <device> <key slot number>
264 Wipe the key-slot number <key slot> from the LUKS device. A remaining
265 passphrase must be supplied, either interactively or via \-\-key-file.
266 This command can remove the last remaining key-slot, but requires
267 an interactive confirmation when doing so. Removing the last
268 passphrase makes a LUKS container permanently inaccessible.
270 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-keyfile-offset, \-\-keyfile-size].
272 \fBWARNING:\fR If you read the passphrase from stdin
273 (without further argument or with '-' as argument
274 to \-\-key-file), batch-mode (-q) will be implicitely
275 switched on and no warning will be given when you remove the
276 last remaining passphrase from a LUKS container. Removing
277 the last passphrase makes the LUKS container permanently
280 \fIluksUUID\fR <device>
282 Print the UUID of a LUKS device.
284 Set new UUID if \fI\-\-uuid\fR option is specified.
286 \fIisLuks\fR <device>
288 Returns true, if <device> is a LUKS device, false otherwise.
289 Use option \-v to get human-readable feedback. 'Command successful.'
290 means the device is a LUKS device.
292 \fIluksDump\fR <device>
294 Dump the header information of a LUKS device.
296 If the \-\-dump-master-key option is used, the LUKS device master key is
297 dumped instead of the keyslot info. Beware that the master key cannot be
298 changed and can be used to decrypt the data stored in the LUKS container
299 without a passphrase and even without the LUKS header. This means
300 that if the master key is compromised, the whole device has to be
301 erased to prevent further access. Use this option carefully.
303 In order to dump the master key, a passphrase has to be supplied,
304 either interactively or via \-\-key-file.
306 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-dump-master-key, \-\-key-file,
307 \-\-keyfile-offset, \-\-keyfile-size].
309 \fBWARNING:\fR If \-\-dump-master-key is used with \-\-key-file
310 and the argument to \-\-key-file is '-', no validation question
311 will be asked and no warning given.
313 \fIluksHeaderBackup\fR <device> \-\-header-backup-file <file>
315 Stores a binary backup of the LUKS header and keyslot area.
317 Note: Using '-' as filename writes the header backup to a file named '-'.
319 \fBWARNING:\fR This backup file and a passphrase valid
320 at the time of backup allows decryption of the
321 LUKS data area, even if the passphrase was later changed or
322 removed from the LUKS device. Also note that with a header
323 backup you lose the ability to securely wipe the LUKS
324 device by just overwriting the header and key-slots. You
325 either need to securely erase all header backups in
326 addition or overwrite the encrypted data area as well.
327 The second option is less secure, as some sectors
328 can survive, e.g. due to defect management.
330 \fIluksHeaderRestore\fR <device> \-\-header-backup-file <file>
332 Restores a binary backup of the LUKS header and keyslot area
333 from the specified file.
335 Note: Using '-' as filename reads the header backup from a file named '-'.
337 \fBWARNING:\fR Header and keyslots will be replaced, only
338 the passphrases from the backup will work afterwards.
340 This command requires that the master key size and data offset
341 of the LUKS header already on the device and of the header backup
342 match. Alternatively, if there is no LUKS header on the device,
343 the backup will also be written to it.
344 .SH loop-AES EXTENSION
345 cryptsetup supports mapping loop-AES encrypted partition using
346 a compatibility mode.
348 \fIopen\fR \-\-type loopaes <device> <name> \-\-key-file <keyfile>
350 \fIloopaesOpen\fR <device> <name> \-\-key-file <keyfile> (\fBold syntax\fR)
352 Opens the loop-AES <device> and sets up a mapping <name>.
354 If the key file is encrypted with GnuPG, then you have to use
355 \-\-key-file=- and decrypt it before use, e.g. like this:
357 gpg \-\-decrypt <keyfile> | cryptsetup loopaesOpen \-\-key-file=- <device> <name>
359 Use \fB\-\-keyfile-size\fR to specify the proper key length if needed.
361 Use \fB\-\-offset\fR to specify device offset. Note that the units
362 need to be specified in number of 512 byte sectors.
364 Use \fB\-\-skip\fR to specify the IV offset. If the original device
365 used an offset and but did not use it in IV sector calculations,
366 you have to explicitly use \fB\-\-skip 0\fR in addition to the offset
369 Use \fB\-\-hash\fR to override the default hash function for
370 passphrase hashing (otherwise it is detected according to key
373 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-key-size, \-\-offset, \-\-skip,
374 \-\-hash, \-\-readonly, \-\-allow-discards].
376 See also section 7 of the FAQ and \fBhttp://loop-aes.sourceforge.net\fR
377 for more information regarding loop-AES.
378 .SH TCRYPT (TrueCrypt-compatible) EXTENSION
379 cryptsetup supports mapping of TrueCrypt or tcplay encrypted partition
380 using a native Linux kernel API.
381 Header formatting and TCRYPT header change is not supported, cryptsetup
382 never changes TCRYPT header on-device.
384 TCRYPT extension requires kernel userspace crypto API to be available
385 (kernel af_alg and algif_skcipher modules, introduced in Linux kernel 2.6.38).
387 Because TCRYPT header is encrypted, you have to always provide valid
388 passphrase and keyfiles.
390 Cryptsetup should recognize all header variants, except legacy cipher chains
391 using LRW encryption mode with 64 bits encryption block (namely Blowfish
392 in LRW mode is not recognized, this is limitation of kernel crypto API).
394 \fBNOTE:\fR Activation with \fBtcryptOpen\fR is supported only for cipher chains
395 using LRW or XTS encryption modes.
397 The \fBtcryptDump\fR command should work for all recognized TCRYPT devices
398 and doesn't require superuser privilege.
400 To use hidden header (and map hidden device, if available),
401 use \fB\-\-hidden\fR option.
403 \fIopen\fR \-\-type tcrypt <device> <name>
405 \fItcryptOpen\fR <device> <name> (\fBold syntax\fR)
407 Opens the TCRYPT (a TrueCrypt-compatible) <device> and sets up a mapping <name>.
409 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-key-file, \-\-hidden, \-\-readonly,
410 \-\-test-passphrase].
412 The keyfile parameter allows combination of file content with the
413 passphrase and can be repeated. Note that using keyfiles is compatible
414 with TCRYPT and is different from LUKS keyfile logic.
416 \fItcryptDump\fR <device>
418 Dump the header information of a TCRYPT device.
420 If the \-\-dump-master-key option is used, the TCRYPT device master key is
421 dumped instead of TCRYPT header info. Beware that the master key
422 (or concatenated master keys if cipher chain is used)
423 can be used to decrypt the data stored in the TCRYPT container without
425 This means that if the master key is compromised, the whole device has
426 to be erased to prevent further access. Use this option carefully.
428 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-dump-master-key, \-\-key-file, \-\-hidden].
430 The keyfile parameter allows combination of file content with the
431 passphrase and can be repeated.
433 See also \fBhttp://www.truecrypt.org\fR for more information regarding
436 Please note that cryptsetup does not use TrueCrypt code, please report
437 all problems related to this compatibility extension to cryptsetup project.
440 \fIrepair\fR <device>
442 Tries to repair the device metadata if possible. Currently supported only
443 for LUKS device type.
445 This command is useful to fix some known benign LUKS metadata
446 header corruptions. Only basic corruptions of unused keyslot
447 are fixable. This command will only change the LUKS header, not
450 \fBWARNING:\fR Always create a binary backup of the original
451 header before calling this command.
453 \fIbenchmark\fR <options>
455 Benchmarks ciphers and KDF (key derivation function).
456 Without parameters it tries to measure few common configurations.
458 To benchmark other ciphers or modes, you need to specify \fB\-\-cipher\fR
459 and \fB\-\-key-size\fR options or \fB\-\-hash\fR for KDF test.
461 \fBNOTE:\fR This benchmark is using memory only and is only informative.
462 You cannot directly predict real storage encryption speed from it.
464 For testing block ciphers, this benchmark requires kernel userspace
465 crypto API to be available (kernel af_alg and algif_skcipher modules,
466 introduced in Linux kernel 2.6.38).
468 \fB<options>\fR can be [\-\-cipher, \-\-key-size, \-\-hash].
471 .B "\-\-verbose, \-v"
472 Print more information on command execution.
475 Run in debug mode with full diagnostic logs. Debug output
476 lines are always prefixed by '#'.
478 .B "\-\-hash, \-h \fI<hash-spec>\fR"
479 Specifies the passphrase hash for \fIopen\fR (for plain and loopaes device types).
481 Specifies the hash used in the LUKS key setup scheme and volume key digest
482 for \fIluksFormat\fR.
484 The specified hash name is passed to the compiled-in crypto backend.
485 Different backends may support different hashes.
486 For \fIluksFormat\fR, the hash
487 algorithm must provide at least 160 bits of output, which
488 excludes, e.g., MD5. Do not use a non-crypto hash like
489 \fB"crc32"\fR as this breaks security.
491 Values compatible with old version of cryptsetup are
492 \fB"ripemd160"\fR for \fIopen \-\-type plain\fR and
493 \fB"sha1"\fR for \fIluksFormat\fR.
495 Use \fIcryptsetup \-\-help\fR to show the defaults.
497 .B "\-\-cipher, \-c \fI<cipher-spec>\fR"
498 Set the cipher specification string.
500 \fIcryptsetup \-\-help\fR shows the compiled-in defaults.
501 The current default in the distributed sources is
502 "aes-cbc-essiv:sha256" for both plain dm-crypt and LUKS.
504 For XTS mode (a possible future default), use "aes-xts-plain"
505 or better "aes-xts-plain64"
506 as cipher specification and optionally set a key size of
507 512 bits with the \-s option. Key size for XTS
508 mode is twice that for other modes for the same
511 XTS mode requires kernel 2.6.24 or later and plain64 requires
512 kernel 2.6.33 or later. More information can be found in the FAQ.
514 .B "\-\-verify-passphrase, \-y"
515 When interactively asking for a passphrase, ask for it twice
516 and complain if both inputs do not match. Advised when creating
517 a regular mapping for the first time, or when running
518 \fIluksFormat\fR. Ignores on input from file or stdin.
520 .B "\-\-key-file, \-d \fIname\fR"
521 Read the passphrase from file.
523 If the name given is "-", then the passphrase will be read from stdin.
524 In this case, reading will not stop at newline characters.
526 With LUKS, passphrases supplied via \-\-key-file are always
527 the existing passphrases requested by a command, except in
528 the case of \fIluksFormat\fR where \-\-key-file is equivalent
529 to the positional key file argument.
531 If you want to set a new passphrase via key file, you have to
532 use a positional argument to \fIluksAddKey\fR.
534 See section \fBNOTES ON PASSPHRASE PROCESSING\fR for more information.
536 .B "\-\-keyfile-offset \fIvalue\fR"
537 Skip \fIvalue\fR bytes at the beginning of the key file.
538 Works with all commands that accepts key files.
540 .B "\-\-keyfile-size, \-l \fIvalue\fR"
541 Read a maximum of \fIvalue\fR bytes from the key file.
542 Default is to read the whole file up to the compiled-in
543 maximum that can be queried with \-\-help. Supplying more
544 data than the compiled-in maximum aborts the operation.
546 This option is useful
547 to cut trailing newlines, for example. If \-\-keyfile-offset
548 is also given, the size count starts after the offset.
549 Works with all commands that accepts key files.
551 .B "\-\-new-keyfile-offset \fIvalue\fR"
552 Skip \fIvalue\fR bytes at the start when
553 adding a new passphrase from key file with
556 .B "\-\-new-keyfile-size \fIvalue\fR"
557 Read a maximum of \fIvalue\fR bytes when adding
558 a new passphrase from key file with \fIluksAddKey\fR.
559 Default is to read the whole file up to the compiled-in
560 maximum length that can be queried with \-\-help.
561 Supplying more than the compiled in maximum aborts the
563 When \-\-new-keyfile-offset is also given, reading starts
566 .B "\-\-master-key-file"
567 Use a master key stored in a file.
569 For \fIluksFormat\fR this
570 allows creating a LUKS header with this specific
571 master key. If the master key was taken from an existing
572 LUKS header and all other parameters are the same,
573 then the new header decrypts the data encrypted with the
574 header the master key was taken from.
576 For \fIluksAddKey\fR this allows adding a new passphrase
577 without having to know an exiting one.
579 For \fIopen\fR this allows to open the LUKS device
580 without giving a passphrase.
582 .B "\-\-dump-master-key"
583 For \fIluksDump\fR this option includes the master key in the displayed
584 information. Use with care, as the master key can be used to
585 bypass the passphrases, see also option \-\-master-key-file.
590 For \fIluksFormat\fR these options define which kernel random number
591 generator will be used to create the master key (which is a
594 See \fBNOTES ON RANDOM NUMBER GENERATORS\fR for more
595 information. Use \fIcryptsetup \-\-help\fR
596 to show the compiled-in default random number generator.
598 \fBWARNING:\fR In a low-entropy situation (e.g. in an
599 embedded system), both selections are problematic.
600 Using /dev/urandom can lead to weak keys.
601 Using /dev/random can block a long time, potentially
602 forever, if not enough entropy can be harvested by
605 .B "\-\-key-slot, \-S <0-7>"
606 For LUKS operations that add key material, this options allows you
607 to specify which key slot is selected for the new key.
608 This option can be used for \fIluksFormat\fR,
609 and \fIluksAddKey\fR.
611 In addition, for \fIopen\fR, this option selects a
612 specific key-slot to compare the passphrase against.
613 If the given passphrase would only match a different key-slot,
616 .B "\-\-key-size, \-s <bits>"
617 Sets key size in bits. The argument has to be a multiple of
618 8. The possible key-sizes are limited by the cipher and
621 See /proc/crypto for more information. Note that key-size
622 in /proc/crypto is stated in bytes.
624 This option can be used for \fIopen \-\-type plain\fR or \fIluksFormat\fR.
625 All other LUKS actions will use the key-size specified in the LUKS header.
626 Use \fIcryptsetup \-\-help\fR to show the compiled-in defaults.
628 .B "\-\-size, \-b <number of 512 byte sectors>"
629 Force the size of the underlying device in sectors of 512 bytes.
630 This option is only relevant for the \fIopen\fR and \fIresize\fR
633 .B "\-\-offset, \-o <number of 512 byte sectors>"
634 Start offset in the backend device in 512-byte sectors.
635 This option is only relevant for the \fIopen\fR action with plain
636 or loopaes device types.
638 .B "\-\-skip, \-p <number of 512 byte sectors>"
639 How many sectors of the encrypted data to skip at the beginning.
640 This option is only relevant for the \fIopen\fR action with plain
641 or loopaes device types.
643 This is different from the \-\-offset options with respect to
644 the sector numbers used in IV calculation.
645 Using \-\-offset will shift the IV calculation by the same negative amount.
646 Hence, if \-\-offset \fIn\fR, sector \fIn\fR will get a sector
647 number of \fI0\fR for the IV calculation.
648 Using \-\-skip causes sector \fIn\fR to also be the first sector
649 of the mapped device, but with its number for IV generation is \fIn\fR.
651 .B "\-\-readonly, \-r"
652 set up a read-only mapping.
655 Creates an additional mapping for one common
656 ciphertext device. Arbitrary mappings are supported.
657 This option is only relevant for the
658 \fIopen \-\-type plain\fR action. Use \-\-offset, \-\-size and \-\-skip to
659 specify the mapped area.
661 .B "\-\-iter-time, \-i <number of milliseconds>"
662 The number of milliseconds to spend with PBKDF2 passphrase processing.
663 This option is only relevant for LUKS operations that set or change
664 passphrases, such as \fIluksFormat\fR or \fIluksAddKey\fR.
665 Specifying 0 as parameter selects the compiled-in default.
667 .B "\-\-batch-mode, \-q"
668 Suppresses all confirmation questions. Use with care!
670 If the \-y option is not specified, this option also switches off
671 the passphrase verification for \fIluksFormat\fR.
673 .B "\-\-timeout, \-t <number of seconds>"
674 The number of seconds to wait before timeout on passphrase input
675 via terminal. It is relevant every time a passphrase is asked,
676 for example for \fIopen\fR, \fIluksFormat\fR or \fIluksAddKey\fR.
677 It has no effect if used in conjunction with \-\-key-file.
679 This option is useful when the system
680 should not stall if the user does not input a passphrase,
681 e.g. during boot. The default is a value of 0 seconds,
682 which means to wait forever.
685 How often the input of the passphrase shall be retried.
686 This option is relevant
687 every time a passphrase is asked, for example for
688 \fIopen\fR, \fIluksFormat\fR or \fIluksAddKey\fR.
689 The default is 3 tries.
691 .B "\-\-align-payload <number of 512 byte sectors>"
692 Align payload at a boundary of \fIvalue\fR 512-byte sectors.
693 This option is relevant for \fIluksFormat\fR.
695 If not specified, cryptsetup tries to use the topology info
696 provided by kernel for the underlying device to get optimal alignment.
697 If not available (or the calculated value is a multiple of the default)
698 data is by default aligned to a 1MiB boundary (i.e. 2048 512-byte sectors).
700 For a detached LUKS header this option specifies the offset on the
701 data device. See also the \-\-header option.
703 .B "\-\-uuid=\fIUUID\fR"
704 Use the provided \fIUUID\fR for the \fIluksFormat\fR command
705 instead of generating new one. Changes the existing UUID when
706 used with the \fIluksUUID\fR command.
708 The UUID must be provided in the standard UUID format,
709 e.g. 12345678-1234-1234-1234-123456789abc.
711 .B "\-\-allow-discards\fR"
712 Allow the use of discard (TRIM) requests for device.
713 This option is only relevant for \fIopen\fR action.
715 \fBWARNING:\fR This command can have a negative security impact
716 because it can make filesystem-level operations visible on
717 the physical device. For example, information leaking
718 filesystem type, used space, etc. may be extractable from
719 the physical device if the discarded blocks can be located
720 later. If in doubt, do no use it.
722 A kernel version of 3.1 or later is needed. For earlier kernels
723 this option is ignored.
725 .B "\-\-test-passphrase\fR"
726 Do not activate device, just verify passphrase.
727 This option is only relevant for \fIopen\fR action (the device
728 mapping name is not mandatory if this option is used).
730 .B "\-\-header\fR <device or file storing the LUKS header>"
731 Use a detached (separated) metadata device or file where the
732 LUKS header is stored. This options allows to store ciphertext
733 and LUKS header on different devices.
735 This option is only relevant for LUKS devices and can be
736 used with the \fIluksFormat\fR, \fIopen\fR, \fIluksSuspend\fR,
737 \fIluksResume\fR, \fIstatus\fR and \fIresize\fR commands.
739 For \fIluksFormat\fR with a file name as argument to \-\-header,
740 it has to exist and be large enough to contain the LUKS header.
741 See the cryptsetup FAQ for header size calculation.
743 For other commands that change the LUKS header (e.g. \fIluksAddKey\fR),
744 specify the device or file with the LUKS header directly as the
747 If used with \fIluksFormat\fR, the \-\-align-payload option is taken
748 as absolute sector alignment on ciphertext device and can be zero.
750 \fBWARNING:\fR There is no check whether the ciphertext device specified
751 actually belongs to the header given. In fact you can specify an
752 arbitrary device as the ciphertext device for \fIopen\fR
753 with the \-\-header option. Use with care.
756 Show the program version.
759 Show short option help.
762 Show help text and default parameters.
764 Cryptsetup returns 0 on success and a non-zero value on error.
766 Error codes are: 1 wrong parameters, 2 no permission (bad passphrase),
767 3 out of memory, 4 wrong device specified, 5 device already exists
769 .SH NOTES ON PASSPHRASE PROCESSING FOR PLAIN MODE
770 Note that no iterated hashing or salting is done in plain mode.
771 If hashing is done, it is a single direct hash. This means that
772 low-entropy passphrases are easy to attack in plain mode.
774 \fBFrom a terminal\fR: The passphrase is read until the
775 first newline, i.e. '\\n'.
776 The input without the newline character is processed with
777 the default hash or the hash specified with \-\-hash.
778 The has result will be truncated to the key size
779 of the used cipher, or the size specified with \-s.
781 \fBFrom stdin\fR: Reading will continue until a newline (or until
782 the maximum input size is reached), with the trailing newline
783 stripped. The maximum input size is defined by the same
784 compiled-in default as for the maximum key file size and can
785 be overwritten using \-\-keyfile-size option.
787 The data read will be hashed with the default hash
788 or the hash specified with \-\-hash.
789 The has result will be truncated to the key size
790 of the used cipher, or the size specified with \-s.
792 Note that if \-\-key-file=- is used for reading the key
793 from stdin, trailing newlines are not stripped from the input.
795 If "plain" is used as argument to \-\-hash, the input
796 data will not be hashed. Instead, it will be zero padded (if
797 shorter than the key size) or truncated (if longer than the
798 key size) and used directly as the binary key. This is useful for
799 directly specifying a binary key.
800 No warning will be given if the amount of data read from stdin is
801 less than the key size.
803 \fBFrom a key file\fR: It will be truncated to the
804 key size of the used cipher or the size given by \-s
805 and directly used as binary key.
806 if the key file is shorter than the key, cryptsetup
807 will quit with an error.
809 .SH NOTES ON PASSPHRASE PROCESSING FOR LUKS
810 LUKS uses PBKDF2 to protect against dictionary attacks
811 and to give some protection to low-entropy passphrases
812 (see RFC 2898 and the cryptsetup FAQ).
814 \fBFrom a terminal\fR: The passphrase is read until the
815 first newline and then processed by PBKDF2 without
816 the newline character.
819 LUKS will read passphrases from stdin up to the
820 first newline character or the compiled-in
821 maximum key file length. If \-\-keyfile-size is
822 given, it is ignored.
825 The complete keyfile is read up to the compiled-in
826 maximum size. Newline characters do not terminate the
827 input. The \-\-keyfile-size option can be used to limit
830 \fBPassphrase processing\fR:
831 Whenever a passphrase is added to a LUKS header (luksAddKey, luksFormat),
832 the user may specify how much the time the passphrase processing
833 should consume. The time is used to determine the iteration count
834 for PBKDF2 and higher times will offer better protection for
835 low-entropy passphrases, but open will take longer to
836 complete. For passphrases that have entropy higher than the
837 used key length, higher iteration times will not increase security.
839 The default setting of one second is sufficient for most
840 practical cases. The only exception is a low-entropy
841 passphrase used on a slow device.
842 .SH INCOHERENT BEHAVIOR FOR INVALID PASSPHRASES/KEYS
843 LUKS checks for a valid passphrase when an encrypted partition
844 is unlocked. The behavior of plain dm-crypt is different.
845 It will always decrypt with the passphrase given. If the
846 given passphrase is wrong, the device mapped by plain
847 dm-crypt will essentially still contain encrypted data and
849 .SH NOTES ON SUPPORTED CIPHERS, MODES, HASHES AND KEY SIZES
850 The available combinations of ciphers, modes, hashes and key sizes
851 depend on kernel support. See /proc/crypto for a list of available
852 options. You might need to load additional kernel crypto modules
853 in order to get more options.
855 For the \-\-hash option, if the crypto backend is libgcrypt,
856 then all algorithms supported by the gcrypt library are available.
857 For other crypto backends some algorithms may be missing.
858 .SH NOTES ON PASSPHRASES
859 Mathematics can't be bribed. Make sure you keep your passphrases safe.
860 There are a few nice tricks for constructing a fallback, when suddenly
861 out of the blue, your brain refuses to cooperate.
862 These fallbacks need LUKS, as it's only possible with LUKS
863 to have multiple passphrases. Still, if your attacker model does
864 not prevent it, storing your passphrase in a sealed envelope somewhere
865 may be a good idea as well.
866 .SH NOTES ON RANDOM NUMBER GENERATORS
867 Random Number Generators (RNG) used in cryptsetup are always the
868 kernel RNGs without any modifications or additions to data stream
871 There are two types of randomness cryptsetup/LUKS needs. One type
872 (which always uses /dev/urandom) is used for salts, the AF splitter
873 and for wiping deleted keyslots.
875 The second type is used for the volume (master) key. You can switch
876 between using /dev/random and /dev/urandom here, see
877 \fP\-\-use-random\fR and \fP\-\-use-urandom\fR
878 options. Using /dev/random on a system without enough entropy sources
879 can cause \fPluksFormat\fR to block until the requested amount of
880 random data is gathered. In a low-entropy situation (embedded system),
881 this can take a very long time and potentially forever. At the same
882 time, using /dev/urandom in a low-entropy situation will
883 produce low-quality keys. This is a serious problem, but solving
884 it is out of scope for a mere man-page.
885 See \fPurandom(4)\fR for more information.
886 .SH NOTES ON LOOPBACK DEVICE USE
887 Cryptsetup is usually used directly on a block device (disk
888 partition or LVM volume). However, if the device argument is a
889 file, cryptsetup tries to allocate a loopback device
890 and map it into this file. This mode requires Linux kernel 2.6.25
891 or more recent which supports the loop autoclear flag (loop device is
892 cleared on last close automatically). Of course, you can
893 always map a file to a loop-device manually. See the
894 cryptsetup FAQ for an example.
896 When device mapping is active, you can see the loop backing file in
897 the status command output. Also see losetup(8).
898 .SH DEPRECATED ACTIONS
900 The \fIreload\fR action is no longer supported.
901 Please use \fIdmsetup(8)\fR if you need to
902 directly manipulate with the device mapping table.
904 The \fIluksDelKey\fR was replaced with \fIluksKillSlot\fR.
907 Report bugs, including ones in the documentation, on
908 the cryptsetup mailing list at <dm-crypt@saout.de>
909 or in the 'Issues' section on LUKS website.
910 Please attach the output of the failed command with the
911 \-\-debug option added.
913 cryptsetup originally written by Christophe Saout <christophe@saout.de>
915 The LUKS extensions and original man page were written by
916 Clemens Fruhwirth <clemens@endorphin.org>.
918 Man page extensions by Milan Broz <gmazyland@gmail.com>.
920 Man page rewrite and extension by Arno Wagner <arno@wagner.name>.
922 Copyright \(co 2004 Christophe Saout
924 Copyright \(co 2004-2006 Clemens Fruhwirth
926 Copyright \(co 2009-2012 Red Hat, Inc.
928 Copyright \(co 2009-2012 Milan Broz
930 Copyright \(co 2012 Arno Wagner
932 This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
933 warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
935 The LUKS website at \fBhttp://code.google.com/p/cryptsetup/\fR
937 The cryptsetup FAQ, contained in the distribution package and
939 \fBhttp://code.google.com/p/cryptsetup/wiki/FrequentlyAskedQuestions\fR
941 The cryptsetup mailing list and list archive, see FAQ entry 1.6.
943 The LUKS on-disk format specification available at
944 \fBhttp://code.google.com/p/cryptsetup/wiki/Specification\fR